Pedicabs tooled across the UNR campus, taking students to the polls last week. Marika Dimitriadis, a UNR alumna and campus organizer for Re-energize the Vote, skated on roller blades between the library and the Joe Crowley Student Union.

โ€œAre you registered to vote?โ€ she asked students. โ€œDid you vote?โ€

Some nodded. Some ignored her.

I was wearing my โ€œI voted earlyโ€ sticker and feeling optimistic. This election season, 20-somethings stood in line to vote early at UNR. Contrary to some reports, many college students actually do care about politics.

After spending half a semester working on campus, Dimitriadis also enjoyed watching students line up to vote.

โ€œThe single vote is critical,โ€ Dimitriadis told me. โ€œBut youth, in general, havenโ€™t been voicing themselves. Weโ€™ve been here to show them their voices are valuableโ€”and to show politicians that youth voices count.โ€

Iโ€™m writing this column before Nov. 2. But thereโ€™s already good news about midterm elections. This year marked the first widespread effort of Re-energize the Vote, a national non-partisan project funded by the Sierra Clubโ€™s Student Coalition.

Reno campus organizers Dimitriadis and Jordan Butler registered voters at UNR, TMCC and Sierra Nevada Job Corps. They went to classes, frat houses and downtown bars. They signed up about 2,300 young voters from Northern Nevadaโ€”Republicans, Democrats and non-partisans.

Butler, 24, likes to disprove the stereotype of politically apathetic youth.

โ€œThey just need a little push, a little information,โ€ he said. โ€œOnce you present the election to them, and why itโ€™s important, most people are receptive.โ€

To make this point, Butler told several groups of students his Peace Corps story. In 2008, Butler graduated from UNR with a political science major and minors in French and journalism. He joined the Peace Corps and went to Madagascar. He taught English there to middle and secondary school students.

In 2009, political violence broke out as the countryโ€™s leadership was challenged. Madagascarโ€™s military fired shots into a crowd of protesters.

โ€œJust mowing people down,โ€ Butler recalled. โ€œReal bulletsโ€”not rubber.โ€

In the small city where Butler worked, a mob of protestors shut down the radio station and burned down the local yogurt shopโ€”owned by then-president Marc Ravalomanana. The mob then turned its attention to the port. Butler lived nearby.

โ€œThey looted sugar and vanilla for three hours,โ€ Butler said. โ€œI sat on my patio watching people haul away sacks of sugar and vanilla.โ€

The U.S. government decided Madagascar was too volatile. Peace Corps workers were evacuated, though Butler had a year left to serve. Andry Rajoelina, media mogul and former mayor of the capital, assumed the presidency. To date, no elections have been held.

โ€œThe whole thing made me realize how much is required to maintain a healthy democracy,โ€ Butler said. โ€œMadagascar is supposed to be a democracy, but only 15 percent of the people vote. Its new president came to powerโ€”not through a fair electionโ€”but through a military coup.โ€

Butler doesnโ€™t fear a similar incident in the United States. But democracy functions more smoothly when all voices are heard and can influence governmentโ€”without violence.

Thatโ€™s why Butler and Dimitriadis worked 12-hour days to encourage students to vote. They also signed up about 100 volunteers to help with registration and voter pledges. Now that the electionโ€™s over, some volunteers want to start a campus club.

โ€œYou have given me hope,โ€ I told Butler during early voting, as he manned a table covered with signs, stickers and T-shirts.

โ€œWeโ€™ve annoyed a lot of people, asking them to register to vote over and over again,โ€ Butler replied. โ€œSo itโ€™s nice when people come up to the table and say, โ€˜Thank you.โ€™โ€

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